Document detail
ID

doi:10.1007/978-981-99-8220-2_...

Author
Robdrup, Melissa Hubbard, Michelle Gorim, Linda Yuya Gorzelak, Monika A.
Langue
en
Editor

Springer

Category

Mycology

Year

2024

listing date

1/17/2024

Keywords
arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (amf)... common mycorrhizal networks (cmn) intercropping mycorrhizas soil health regenerative agriculture roots soil agriculture roots plants systems mycorrhizal regenerative
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Abstract

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) increase in diversity and abundance in agricultural systems that emphasize soil health practices, including regenerative agriculture and intercropping.

Regenerative agriculture in principle includes any practice that increases biodiversity and living roots and integrates livestock while reducing tillage, bare soil, and agrichemical inputs.

Intercropping increases biodiversity in an annual system and reduces disease prevalence and weeds while improving soil conditions and yielding more than the equivalent monocrop.

These principles and practices simultaneously support AMF proliferation in soils and in turn AMF provide multiple benefits to crops.

AMF colonize roots, trading photosynthates for nutrients acquired beyond the reach of the plant root system.

While colonizing roots, they trigger innate plant immunity and confer resistance to some insect, fungal, and bacterial pests.

Colonized plants hold more water and thus are more resistant to drought.

In soils with ample AMF propagules, multiple plants are likely to become connected to their neighbors by a common mycorrhizal network (CMN).

Plants connected by a CMN are likely to share beneficial microbes, resistance to disease, and resources.

A better understanding of crop root traits and AMF is important to building a wholistic picture of ecological interactions that can be leveraged to maintain agricultural production in intercropped, regenerative, and conventional systems.

Robdrup, Melissa,Hubbard, Michelle,Gorim, Linda Yuya,Gorzelak, Monika A., 2024, Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi Under Intercrop, Regenerative, and Conventional Agriculture Systems, Springer

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